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  2. Behavioral epigenetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_epigenetics

    Behavioral epigenetics is the field of study examining the role of epigenetics in shaping animal and human behavior. [1] It seeks to explain how nurture shapes nature, [2] where nature refers to biological heredity [3] and nurture refers to virtually everything that occurs during the life-span (e.g., social-experience, diet and nutrition, and exposure to toxins). [4]

  3. Phenotype - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenotype

    It may seem that anything dependent on the genotype is a phenotype, including molecules such as RNA and proteins. Most molecules and structures coded by the genetic material are not visible in the appearance of an organism, yet they are observable (for example by Western blotting) and are thus part of the phenotype; human blood groups are an ...

  4. Protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein

    The development of such tools has been driven by the large and fast-growing amount of genomic and proteomic data available for a variety of organisms, including the human genome. The resources do not exist to study all proteins experimentally, thus only a few are subjected to laboratory experiments while computational tools are used to ...

  5. Pleiotropy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiotropy

    Pleiotropy seems limited for many traits in humans since the SNP overlap, as measured by variance accounted for, between many polygenic predictors is small. Most genetic traits are polygenic in nature: controlled by many genetic variants, each of small effect. These genetic variants can reside in protein coding or non-coding regions of the genome.

  6. Behavioural genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioural_genetics

    Selective breeding and the domestication of animals is perhaps the earliest evidence that humans considered the idea that individual differences in behaviour could be due to natural causes. [1] Plato and Aristotle each speculated on the basis and mechanisms of inheritance of behavioural characteristics. [ 2 ]

  7. Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transgenerational...

    An example of how the environment within the womb can affect the health of an offspring is the Dutch hunger winter of 1944–45 and its causal effect on induced transgenerational epigenetic inherited diseases. During the Dutch hunger winter, the offspring exposed to famine conditions during the third trimester of development were smaller than ...

  8. Introduction to genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduction_to_genetics

    Some traits are part of an organism's physical appearance, such as eye color or height. Other sorts of traits are not easily seen and include blood types or resistance to diseases. Some traits are inherited through genes, which is the reason why tall and thin people tend to have tall and thin children.

  9. Human genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_genetics

    The human genome is the total collection of genes in a human being contained in the human chromosome, composed of over three billion nucleotides. [2] In April 2003, the Human Genome Project was able to sequence all the DNA in the human genome, and to discover that the human genome was composed of around 20,000 protein coding genes.